Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 295, Decatur, Adams County, 16 December 1959 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1958
1 " — n M What’s Your Postal I. Q.? k \ * 1 """'Z—"""" ■!■■■""■ " —■" 11 UNSEALED POINTED CHRISTMAS CARDS WITH 3 CENT STAMP TRUE Z7 ENTITLES CARO TO (AUEZ7 FORWARDING. < WB
FALSE. Although an unsealed printed Christmas card containing only a brief, written seasonal greeting such as “Merry Christmas,” “Happy New Year,” etc., and the signature of the send may be mailed at the third-class rate of 3 cents for the first two ounces, it may not be forwarded or returned without additional charge. If such a Christmas card is undeliv-
SiMlltilW: x l»+sair ’ > '/%>■■> tA S ?®F' ***• SL' t * x ' x < gl 9/ g Aft ; 1 ® 1 &&& jj * 4H£ y B JtMriSBV; x..^; **^ ■ \ flk x:*£< <^:.£<S»' W «’? gt’? 1 Christinas Greeting Edition _ DECEMBER 23rd ®■® B#L ‘ .... wih beautiful greetings from the Decatur and Adams County stores, manufacturers and professional men . , . and many, many Christmas and Holiday features, pictures and other articles of interest* for every member of the family. Select your greetings for «... this edition now! Stop in and look them over or Phone 3-2121 and we will be pleased to call on you. Decatur Daily Democrat ’■'■'*■ ' iIV ‘ ‘ — IH
I LAMPS UHRICK BROS. I I fan I V Sets of Three As Low As $22.95 |
erable as addressed and the sender or the addressee has not guaranteed forwarding or return postage, the card will be disposed of as waste. Cards mailed at the first-class rate of postage (4 cents per ounce) may be forwarded or returned without additional postage. 2. USE OF “LOCAL” and “OUT OF TOWN” LABELS SPEEDS 11
CHRISTMAS CARDS THROUGH YOUR POST OFFICE. TRUE. Use of “Local" and "Out of Town” labels not only speeds your Christmas cards through your post office but also saves the post office a great deal of time and expense. It’s easy to da Merely separate local letters from those going out of town as directed by the instructions on the back of the labels and tie into separate bundles for mailing. You may obtain these labels at your post office. O' ■ ■ — ■ o Modern Etiquette | , By ROBERTA LEE o ■'■■O Q. Is it all right for a hostess to place the food on the individual dinner plates and have everything ready when her guests sit down, or should she always have the food on platters for passing around? A. In a home without servants, arranging food on the place plates is a very practical idea, and certainly is not improper. Q. To whom does a bride address her leter of thanks for a gift which has been received from a married couple? A. Sh writes to the wife and thanks both: “Thank you for the lovely present you and Mr. Jones (or, Jack) sent me,,etc.” - Trade in a gooa town <— DecaU
THI DRCATUH DAILY DIMOCRAT, DBCATtm, MDIAHA
' Khruschevs I i Visit To U.S. i Top’s 9 Story 1 NEW YORK (UPI) — Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s visit to the United States was the » biggest news story of 1959. That is the opinion of editors of United Press International client newspapers and- UPI editors, 1 who balloted in a nation-wide poll. The top 10 stories of the year: 1- Khrushchev tours United ‘ States; agrees with Eisenhower to ; negotiate further on Berlin with- ■ out a deadline. (Sept.) 1 2. Soviet Union announces it has hit moon with rocket; sends second rocket around moon and 1 takes pictures of other side. (Sept • Oct.) 3. Strike by United Steelwork- ■ ers of America closes down steel 1 and allied industries; 500,000 rei turn to work after Eisenhower invokes Taft-Hartley law (Julyl Nov.) 4. Fidel Castro takes over in i Cuba as Batista flees; revolution takes anti-American turn withi . .
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undertones of Comjpunist infiltration. (Jan.-Dec.) 5. Congressional subcommittee investigates rigging of television quiz shows; Charles Van Doren and other witnesses admit they got answers, to questions in advance. (Oct.) 6. Eisenhower tours Europe, Mideast and Asia; Nixon visits Soviet Union (December-July) 7- John Foster Dulles dies, is replaced by Christian A. Herter as U. S. Secretar yof State. (April-May). 8. Communist Chinese troops move into Tibet, forcing Dalai Lama to flee to India; Red Chinese troops also violate Indian border; Laos charges invasion from Communist North Viet Nam. (March-Aug.-Sept.). x 9. De Gaulle proclaimed first president of Fifth French Republic, presents new plan for Algeria; France shows greatest resurgence since war. (Jan.-Sept.). 10. Louisiana Gov- Earl Long put forcibly into mental institution; frees self at dramatic court session (May). Hawaiian statehood nearly made the list. The voters also rated highly the Senate subcommittee investigation of labor racketeering. The monkeys Able and Baker and their 300-mile - high space flight drew many votes. If there had been a sports catI
egory Ingemar Johansson’s victory over Floyd Patterson, which took the heavyweight championship out of the United States, would have led the list, followed by the Los Angeles Dodger’s playoff win of the National League pennant and their World Series defeat of the Chicago White Sox. Some added starters were passage of the labor law, the preThanksgiving cranberry scare and the Montana earthquake. Few votes were cast for Crown Prince Akihito’s marriage to a commoner, the Mexico floods, death of Errol Flynn and Little Rock school Integration. Christmas Centerpiece An attractive Christmas table centerpiece or mantel decoration can be fashioned by lighting a candle inside a four-sided kitchen grater. The holes in the grater look like hundreds of tiny stars when illuminated from within. Stand this “lantern” on a plate of Christmas greens and top it with a red bow. Stretch It Out! One of the quickest ways to erase washday fatigue is a good stretch—instead of slumping as most of us do. Slumping actually contributes to tiredness, because it cramps the muscles, rather than relaxing them.
-***«;-' J ’. > .f■'•*’?" >'v* I E Hr■ HI,I \ '■if P i Yr uE H BETTER DAYS WILL COME—Aneurin Sevan. MCOnd A command of Britain’s Labor Party, assumes an attitudnnt prayer at the party’s annual conference in BlackpooL The ! labor contingent Is at low ebb after a crushing dg*|at IN> Conservatives in the country's recent general electieM. naalF 1 ■■" ■■■■ 1 '■ ■—..■■ ■—W 4 | I|.aiai I
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